

By the time referee Jason Herzog waved off the main event of UFC 321, the sound that filled Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Arena wasn’t cheers; it was confusion. 13,000 fans had packed the venue expecting a new era of heavyweight dominance. They got 4 minutes and 35 seconds of brilliance, followed by disbelief.
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Tom Aspinall’s first undisputed title defense ended not with a knockout, but with an accident: a double eye poke from Ciryl Gane that left the British champion unable to see. The fight was soon declared a no-contest. But was Gane on his way to an upset before fate intervened? Let’s break it down!
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Ciryl Gane vs Tom Aspinall: The Frenchman showed surgical precision
Coming into UFC 321, the narrative was simple: Aspinall’s wrestling would be the deciding factor. After all, Gane’s last defeat, a quick submission loss to Jon Jones at UFC 285, had exposed a glaring weakness in his ground defense. But in Abu Dhabi, that weakness seemed like a thing of the past.
During the post-fight press conference, the French fighter stated, “I think I started very well, because everybody knows the strategy. Every time he started really hard and surprised his opponent. I think I did very well. We defended the takedown. I touched him. We saw some blood on his nose.”
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And he wasn’t exaggerating. In less than five minutes, Gane out-landed Aspinall 30 to 27 in significant strikes, landing 75% of his shots with surgical precision. His leg kicks cracked early. His jab found its rhythm. And when Aspinall tried to shoot for a takedown, the move that was supposed to separate him from every other heavyweight, Ciryl Gane shrugged it off effortlessly. That moment, brief as it was, felt like a turning point.
As Gane later shared, “I was defending the takedown. In the middle of the first round, I was feeling myself in a certain flow. I started to understand really well what was happening. I thought I would end this fight.”
The stats don’t lie. Gane was efficient. He didn’t need to rush, and anyway, his style has always been one of slow suffocation, breaking opponents down piece by piece before striking with perfection. He did it to Serghei Spivac, to Tai Tuivasa, and to Derrick Lewis: three men he stopped after wearing them out with distance control and patience. Against Aspinall, he was beginning to paint the same picture.
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Within minutes, Aspinall’s nose was bloodied, and his movement, usually fluid, became hesitant. He found himself in an unfamiliar position, chasing, not leading. Gane’s defense, meanwhile, was textbook. His head movement neutralized Aspinall’s speed advantage; his footwork forced the Brit to overextend, and every counter right hand landed like punctuation.
But just as Gane seemed to be settling into a rhythm, the accidental poke halted everything suddenly. Aspinall stumbled back, clutching his face. It was over before it truly began.
For both men, UFC 321 was supposed to answer questions.
- Could Aspinall withstand a technically elite striker for more than a round?
- Could Gane prove that the Jones loss was a fluke and that he could handle pressure without folding?
Aspinall, for his part, didn’t look outclassed, just outpaced. He landed 27 of 39 significant strikes with a sharp 69% accuracy. But it was ‘Bon Gamin’ who dictated the tempo, keeping the fight standing and neutralizing Aspinall’s ground threat.
For all the talk about takedowns, the defending champion managed just one attempt but failed. And that’s where the intrigue lies.
Had the fight continued, we may have seen Gane’s most complete performance yet, one that showcased evolution rather than regression. His timing was crisp, his distance management on point, and his composure under pressure unmatched. For once, Gane wasn’t running. He was hunting. Still, the first four and a half minutes revealed enough to fuel debate for months.
Gane’s improved takedown defense and accurate striking suggest he is far from done as an elite contender. For Aspinall, though, the fight is unfinished business—a blemish that only a rematch can erase!
Daniel Cormier and Dana White agree on the Aspinall vs Gane rematch
If there’s one thing UFC 321 proved, it’s that unfinished business sells. Even with less than five minutes of action, Dana White believes Tom Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane 2 is a must; Not just because of the controversy, but because, for those brief moments, the heavyweight division finally felt alive again.
Speaking at the post-fight conference, White admitted, “I feel the way everybody feels. Great showing, s—y ending. I think that after the [Jon] Jones fight, a lot of people wrote Ciryl Gane off. He looked damn good tonight. It looked like we were in for a few rounds, and it was going to be a good fight.”
The UFC boss called the ending a “total pain in the a–“ but confessed, “they’re both in shape, other than whatever’s wrong with his eye. Both guys are not injured. As soon as possible.
And Daniel Cormier agrees. After watching the no-contest unfold, he stated, “Granted Tom was getting his in too, but it was a good first round, it was competitive, and it looked like we were watching the two best heavyweights in the world. I want to see them fight again as early as December if we can.”
So, Dana White and Daniel Cormier may disagree on plenty, but not on this: the rematch must happen. Gane proved he has evolved from the man who fell to Jon Jones, while Aspinall deserves the chance to defend his crown without controversy. One is seeking redemption, the other? Validation.
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